Nursing Home Neglect Claims Maryland

At Miller & Zois, our Maryland nursing home lawyers fight for justice. We have the resources, experience, and track record for success to help residents and their families win settlements and verdicts in elder abuse and neglect cases throughout the Baltimore-Washington area.

Our primary focus is to recover as much money as possible for our clients who have suffered. But it is also nice to know that our work deters other Maryland nursing home from neglecting and abusing their residents because our lawsuits and settlements remind them that the will be held accountable for the harm they cause.

Has someone you love suffered abuse or neglect in a Maryland assisted living or nursing home facility? If so, you need help. Fill out our free claim review form today and learn about how our Baltimore nursing home attorney can help you get compensation and justice.

An investigation by the U.S. General Accounting Office showed that 25% of this country's nursing homes "had serious deficiencies that caused actual harm to residents or placed them at risk of death or serious injury." The Maryland Office of Health Care Quality received a whopping 1,083 complaints about substandard care in 2015. Is it a mystery that legal proceedings involving nursing homes - both criminal, civil and administrative - are on the rise?

With more and more people living in nursing homes continues to age, there have been stunning reports of abuse and neglect in Maryland nursing homes. There has been an astonishing increase in reports from clients of a subset of medical malpractice: nursing home neglect, abuse, and malpractice cases.

We truly care about victims and their families and fight with every last breath to them the money they deserve for the harm that has been done to them.

You really want to think our seniors are living their golden years like we want to live ours. We assume Grandma and Grandpa are getting good care. It seems nice when we visit. But there are so many cases that have come across my desk that I simply did not believe at first because the story of neglect and abuse seemed too far fetched.

But upon further investigation, we learned that far too many nursing home horror stories that cannot be true are absolutely true.

A nursing home advocacy group called Members of the Family has created a Nursing Home Honor Roll. These are nursing homes identified by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services as meeting the minimum government standards of care, having no violations on the last three annual surveys, and no substantiated complaints during the same time span.

Incredibly, only 1.4% of nursing homes in the United States qualify. In this area, there are no nursing homes in Maryland or Washington, D.C. that qualify. What does this tell us? It tells us that of the 216 nursing homes in Maryland, far too many of them are causing needless pain and anguish to those who are dependent on them.

In 2017, things have not gotten much better. The Nursing Home Report Cards put out by Families for Better Care gave Maryland a "D". The language is harsh:

"Maryland’s nursing homes consistently underachieved, failing to score an above average grade in any reviewed measure... Maryland is the worst nursing home state in the Mid-Atlantic Region."

The point is, this is not a bunch of lawyer-driven hype about the sad state of nursing homes in Maryland. This is an independent study that shows that, comparatively, our state has substandard nursing homes.

Types of Nursing Home Cases

There are two fundamental types of nursing home cases: abuse, neglect, and medical malpractice.

Abuse

Nursing home abuse is defined by federal law (42 C.F.R. 488.301) as the "willful infliction of injury, unreasonable confinement, intimidation or punishment with resulting physical harm, pain or mental anguish." It may involve:

Use of drugs not approved by a medical doctor or the knowing prescription of improper medication (usually some type of sedative in nursing home cases)

Mental and emotional abuse

We see awful elder abuse cases. But the more frequent problem is not outright abuse but just plain indifference to the pain, suffering, health and well-being of the residents.

Neglect

The primary distinction is that abuse is done with intent; neglect is the result of negligence and indifference. The standard for nursing home neglect is whether the caregiver acted as the ordinary reasonable provider in the same position would. It can be defined as failing to care for a resident to the degree, which a reasonable person in the same position would exercise. Federal law (42 C.F.R. 488.301) defines nursing home neglect as the "failure to provide goods and services necessary to avoid physical harm, mental anguish or mental illness." Neglect may include any of the following:

The number of physicians who care for nursing home patients is inadequate. But this does not give doctors and other health care providers the right to ignore or not fully care for nursing home patients. The truth is that a small minority of medical doctors do not provide the same level of care to someone who is elderly and in a nursing home than they would to other patients. These patients deserve the same respect as anyone else. Too often this gets forgotten.

Settlement/Trial Value of Nursing Home Cases We have come a long way in the fight against nursing home abuse and neglect. Twenty years ago, few lawyers were bringing nursing home neglect and abuse cases.

Sometimes, having a good lawyer is as important as having a good case.

According to a report by Jury Verdict Research, The 5 Myths of Nursing Home Litigation, premises liability accounts for 8% of all long-term care liability cases. Furthermore, plaintiffs have a recovery probability of over 50% in nursing home cases compared with approximately 30% of medical malpractice cases. The median verdict for nursing home negligence approaches $200,000 and can rise to $13 million when the verdict includes punitive damages. Punitive damage awards accompanied 19% of all plaintiff verdicts with a median award of $900,000.

Plaintiffs in Maryland will not receive punitive damages in nursing home neglect cases but punitive damages are available in nursing home abuse cases.

This data, of course, tells little about the value of any particular nursing home case, but it does give some background as to the general idea of the value of nursing home cases.

Our law firm handles serious injury and death cases. If you have a case like this, and you want money compensation for the harm that has been caused, you need a Maryland nursing home lawyer who is experienced handling these cases.

The economics of nursing home case only allow our firm to handle cases where the injuries are extreme or the resident has been killed as a result of the negligence.

So the question is, where can you turn for help if you cannot find a nursing home lawyer who can help you. There are at least four possible choices in Maryland:

Legal Aid Bureau, Inc. (Maryland Legal Aid) (410) 951-7777

Maryland Legal Aid is a non-profit law firm that provides pro bono (free) legal services to low-income residents of Maryland who are in need. Maryland Legal Aid has helped hundreds of nursing home resident in getting the access to quality care and protecting their rights under Maryland Law. (410) 951-7777

Maryland Disability Law Center (MDLC) (410) 235-0748

MDLC is a non-profit legal services organization the Governor for people with disabilities within the State. Funded by the federal government, MDLC's mission is to work for people, including nursing residents, with disabilities in defense of their legal and human rights.

The NCCHNR is a national non-profit that fights for quality of care for people with long-term care needs. This organization is honed on ensuring adequate staffing and raising the bar of the standard of care in nursing homes.

Voices for Quality of Care (888) 600-2375

Voices for Quality Care is a non-profit organization in Maryland and Washington, D.C. that works with nursing home residents and the people that love them to help people get the quality care in nursing homes.

Discussing the Case with a Nursing Home Lawyer

Does someone you love who has injuries or unknown origin, bed sores, a broken hip or frequent falls? Are you suspicions of elder abuse or negligence? If so, there may be a claim that can bring about some measure of justice.

We serve the following localities: Baltimore; Prince George's County including Bowie, Laurel, Landover, Hyattsville; Anne Arundel County including Glen Burnie; Baltimore County including Cockeysville, Glyndon, Hunt Valley, Jacksonville, Lutherville-Timonium, Owings Mills, Parkville, Reisterstown, and Towson; Carroll County including Westminster; Frederick County including Frederick; Harford County including Abingdon, Bel Air, Belcamp, and Forest Hill; Montgomery County including Germantown and Rockville; Howard County including Ellicott City and Columbia, Washington, D.C. and Washington County including Hagerstown.